Daily Dispatch

Zuma’s use of ‘post truth’ unlikely to help him unseat Zondo

It is up to the chair to evaluate the evidence brought to the commission, including evidence that a witness is unable to attend. It is thus not in itself a sign of bias if the chair finds the evidence insufficie­nt, writes Cathleen Powell

- Cathleen Powell is the associate professor in public law, University of Cape Town. This article was originally published in The Conversati­on.

“Post-truth ” culture is exemplifie­d by the constant negation of fact-finding, expertise and research. Within such a culture, speakers, whether they occupy positions of power or are commenting anonymousl­y on social media, become increasing­ly comfortabl­e with claiming that reality is whatever they say it is.

This, without any need to offer evidence which can be evaluated against objective criteria through reasoned argument.

Former president Jacob Zuma adopted this approach when he recently demanded that deputy chief justice Ray Zondo, the head of the state capture inquiry, recuse himself. He claimed the judge was biased against him.

His lawyer’s letter to the commission states that Zuma is “of the firm view” that Zondo’s alleged bias against him stems from “personal matters and strained relations that the chairperso­n ought to have disclosed right at the beginning of the inquiry” and “the fact that the president and the chairperso­n have historical, personal, family and profession­al relations that ought to have been publicly disclosed by the chairperso­n before accepting his appointmen­t”.

No evidence is provided of the strained relations, nor of what aspect of Zondo’s and Zuma’s personal dealings could have resulted in bias. Zuma’s “view ” alone is sufficient.

Claiming a right to determine reality by mere say-so is becoming increasing­ly commonplac­e, but we should never get used to it. It is dangerous, because it has the potential to destroy two of the foundation­s of a healthy society: recognisin­g the distinctio­n between facts and opinions, and using reasoned argument, rather than status, to establish the truth.

Since 1999, we have had a test for the impartiali­ty of individual judges from the Constituti­onal Court case of the president of the republic of SA and others v South African Rugby Football Union and others. In this case, the head of the South African Football Union, Louis Luyt, asked five of the judges on the Constituti­onal Court to recuse themselves because of their personal relationsh­ip with Nelson Mandela, the president of democratic SA at the time.

Luyt complained that the then chief justice, Arthur Chaskalson, had attended the wedding of Mandela’s son. He also said other judges had been closely associated with the governing party, the ANC, before their appointmen­t to the Constituti­onal Court.

The court rejected the applicatio­n. It held that the test that the applicant had to meet was objective, and that the onus of establishi­ng it rested upon the applicant, who had to show that a reasonable, objective and informed person would on the correct facts reasonably apprehend that the judge has not or will not bring an impartial mind to bear on the adjudicati­on of the case; that is a mind open to persuasion by the evidence and the submission­s of counsel.

The judge himself or herself decides the applicatio­n, although refusals to recuse can be taken on review to higher courts. The court also emphasised the presumptio­n that judicial officers are impartial in adjudicati­ng disputes, because legal training and experience prepare judges (to determine) where the truth may lie in a welter of contradict­ory evidence.

Finally, the court stressed strongly that the reasonable apprehensi­on must be that “the judicial officer will not decide the case impartiall­y ” and not that he or she “will decide the case adversely to one party”.

The question is whether the same impartiali­ty test applies to chairs of commission­s of inquiry as well.

In one way, the impartiali­ty of chairs of commission­s might appear even more important. That’s because they are actively involved in the collection of evidence, rather than sitting back passively while two sets of lawyers present the evidence of their choice in the adversaria­l setting of a court case.

On the other hand, commission­s of inquiry do not make binding rulings. All they do is to give advice to the office that created them. Their recommenda­tions have no direct effect on persons implicated in the reports. But if we assume that the same, stringent test applies to the chair of a commission, it is likely that Zondo’s past associatio­n with Zuma will not be a ground for recusal.

Most importantl­y, Zuma’s own view of Zondo’s bias –“firm” or not – will simply not be the deciding factor in determinin­g whether Zondo is biased. What will matter is whether a reasonable, objective and informed person would understand that Zondo has not brought, or will not bring, an impartial mind to bear on the evidence.

Zuma has not provided any evidence to prove, as he is required to do, that Zondo would not bring an impartial mind to the task before him. Indeed, some of the “evidence ” mentioned in the letter amounts to a complaint that Zuma is not being given preferenti­al treatment. Thus it treats as bias a generally applicable rule announced by Zondo – that the commission makes the final decision on setting dates for a hearing, not the witnesses – and the fact that Zondo did not accept that Zuma was ill on one of the occasions that he did not appear before the commission.

In January, Zuma tried to postpone appearing before the Commission, citing ill health.

His affidavit included this revealing statement (paragraph 35), “I urge the commission to accept that my views on state capture answer the various opinions expressed by different individual­s who have given their views to the Commission. The Commission and its witnesses are entitled to their views about me, but I am equally entitled to reject them.”

The letter by Zuma’s lawyers demanding Zondo’s recusal does not even bother to state that Zuma provided sufficient evidence of his illness when he wanted to postpone his hearing in January. He sees it as proof of bias (which he is stating now) that Zondo did not accept his evidence then.

It is up to the chair to evaluate the evidence brought to the commission, including evidence that a witness is unable to attend. It is thus not in itself a sign of bias if the chair finds the evidence insufficie­nt. Again, Zuma seems offended that his own “reality ” has not been validated by the person whose job it is to consider all evidence impartiall­y, on its own merits.

Facts matter. It’s the job of courts and commission­s of inquiry to work out what they are. The statements by other witnesses implicatin­g Zuma in orchestrat­ing grand corruption are not “views ”. They are central factual allegation­s that Zuma must address so that the commission can determine the extent of corruption and its agents. “Compelling ” Zuma to do so through a summons (one of Zuma’s complaints in January) is not a sign of bias or bullying.

It is a sign of a commission doing its job on terms approved by the Constituti­onal Court. By casting doubt on the impartiali­ty of the chair, Zuma is probably just buying time. But he is also discrediti­ng a vital institutio­n for ending corruption in SA, and underminin­g the process which SA needs for a clean start.

 ?? Picture: ALON SKUY ?? WRIGGLING: Former president Jacob Zuma has not appeared before the commission yet and now wants deputy chief justice Raymond Zondo to recuse himself.
Picture: ALON SKUY WRIGGLING: Former president Jacob Zuma has not appeared before the commission yet and now wants deputy chief justice Raymond Zondo to recuse himself.
 ?? Picture: THULANI MBELE ?? IN THE CHAIR: Deputy chief justice Raymond Zondo leads the commission into uncovering the extent of state capture.
Picture: THULANI MBELE IN THE CHAIR: Deputy chief justice Raymond Zondo leads the commission into uncovering the extent of state capture.

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